Nokia HERE Maps for Windows 8.1 and RT released

Nokia HERE Maps for Windows 8.1 has arrived for download in the Windows Store, bringing the mapping and navigation app to any Windows tablet, notebook, or PC running Microsoft’s latest … Continue reading

HTC Power To Give brings supercomputer power with smartphones

Using the processing power of smartphones from around the globe, HTC is making an initiative called Power To Give for theresearch of medicine, science, and echology. This initiative will work … Continue reading

BBM for Windows Phone coming summer 2014

BBM, BlackBerry’s instant-messaging service, will arrive on Windows Phone over the summer, the Canadian company has confirmed, as it tries to further push the app as a cross-platform tool. The … Continue reading

Quickly Kill Tasks in Windows

This article was written on November 13, 2007 by CyberNet.

Task Killer I’m sure many of you open up the Task Manager at least a few times each day to shutdown a program, or to check to see which programs are eating up a lot of memory. All of the Task Manager addicts out there will love this free program.

The app is called Task Killer, and it adds an icon to your System Tray for pulling up a list of running processes and programs. In one click you can have a program shutdown, or it will take two clicks if you enable the “prompt before terminating” option in the settings.

One of the other nice things with Task Killer is that you can assign hotkeys to bring up a list of running processes, services, and/or windows. You can also have certain processes excluded from the list so that they never show up. This is great for all of the built-in Windows processes that you never mess with anyway.

Task Killer (requires installation, and does work on Vista despite not explicitly saying that it does)
[via Lifehacker]

Copyright © 2014 CyberNetNews.com

Mouse Wheel Scrolling in Background Windows

This article was written on July 14, 2010 by CyberNet.

background scrolling.png

One of the features I’ve grown accustomed to on my Mac is being able to scroll in any window without first having to bring it to the foreground. The OS is smart enough to realize that I probably want to scroll the window underneath my mouse regardless of whether it is the foreground window. Why is this important? On my multi-monitor set up that means I can be writing an article on one screen and have a product’s website open on the other. I can continue to scroll up and down on the website while the focus stays on the window I’m writing with, and therefore makes it easy to continue typing the article.

Microsoft doesn’t operate Windows in the same fashion, but with a with WizMouse you can get the same functionality without compromising a lot of your system’s resources. When running the app uses just 1.7MB of memory, and is virtually unnoticeable. The overall experience, however, is the opposite… it is very noticeable. After just a day of running WizMouse I was already feeling like I was working on my Mac.

WizMouse will also come in handy if you use some apps that don’t support a mouse wheel. It will convert your mouse wheel actions to scrollbar commands that the program should be able to understand.

This is a must-have app in my book, but that is largely because I’ve grown so accustomed to how it works on the Mac OS. It’s possible that some people may find it annoying, but I’m definitely not one of those people.

WizMouse Homepage (Windows only; 32/64-bit; Freeware)

Copyright © 2014 CyberNetNews.com

RSS Feed Desktop Notifier

This article was written on March 17, 2011 by CyberNet.

RSS feed notifier

I have a rather large collection of a few hundred RSS feeds that I follow daily, but I’ve come across situations where I’d like to get notifications of certain news items instead of having to sift through all the feeds. That’s where Feed Notifier comes into play. It is a desktop notification program that is highly configurable to ensure that you only see popups for the things that interest you.

There are a lot of things Feed Notifier is capable of, but the filtering is the thing that caught my attention the most. I have a screenshot below showing off the filter configuration screen, but I’m sure most of you already know how this kind of system works. Much like email filters you can designate keywords that are required to either be or not be in the entry. The developer put together a guide explaining how the keywords work, and goes on to show how you can use special syntax to apply filters to the author, title, or content fields of the RSS entries. You can also choose whether a filter is applied to all your feeds or only to certain ones.

These are some of the other features found in Feed Notifier:

  • Supports all common RSS and Atom web feed protocols.
  • Configurable polling interval for each feed.
  • Configurable popup duration, size, position (multiple monitor support), and transparency.
  • Popups do not steal keyboard or mouse focus from other applications.
  • Navigation controls in popups to view next/previous items.
  • Advanced keyword filtering options.
  • Supports enabling/disabling individual feeds.
  • Deactivates when user is idle to save bandwidth and processing time.
  • Supports authenticated feeds that require a username and password.
  • Multi-threaded feed polling.

Screenshot of keyword filtering in the Feed Notifier settingsRss feed filter

Feed Notifier Homepage (Windows only; Freeware)

Copyright © 2014 CyberNetNews.com

Mac-Like Stacks in RocketDock

This article was written on May 28, 2009 by CyberNet.

rocketdock stacks.jpgRocketDock is definitely one of my favorite application launchers because of how well it is designed to mimic the functionality of the Mac Dock. It can also be extended with skins to change the appearance, or with docklets to add more features.

The most popular addon across all of the different categories is the Stacks Docklet with over 800,000 downloads! As you can see in the screenshot to the right this emulates the Mac version of Stacks very well, and it’s pretty hard to tell it apart from the Mac Dock if you’ve got the right skin.

The addon hasn’t been updated in a little while, but that doesn’t mean development has stopped. In fact the developer is currently working on rewriting the Stacks Docklet, and if you’re feeling adventurous you can jump in on a pre-release version.

Stacks Docklet Homepage
RocketDock Homepage

Copyright © 2014 CyberNetNews.com

XBMC: Installing Skins

This article was written on April 27, 2012 by CyberNet.

When you first get rolling with XBMC out-of-the-box, you may not be overly enthusiastic about the appearance. By default XBMC 11 ships with the Confluence skin that, while it looks clean, can easily be replaced by one of the other user-made skins. The most impressive one that I found is the Aeon MQ 3 skin which sports a very modern look that is sure to impress anyone that sets eyes on it. I can only imagine the amount of time that’s been spent on the skin given how polished it is.

So how do you get an awesome skin like Aeon MQ 3 installed? For some of the skins they are offered directly through the official XBMC repository (Settings -> Add-ons -> Get Add-ons -> XBMC.org Add-ons -> Skin), and there are a couple of skins in there that are worth checking out. One of my favorites is probably Transparency, but I still prefer Aeon MQ 3.

For Aeon MQ 3, the process is a bit different. For this particular one you’ll either need to download the skin manually or you can set up the developer’s repository. I’m going to show you how to set up the repository and install the skin that way because that means you’ll be able to get future updates a lot easier. Here’s what you need to do:

  1. Download the “Skin Aeon MQ 3 – Repository” file
  2. In XBMC navigate to Settings -> Add-ons
  3. Select the option to Install From ZIP File
  4. Browse for the repository file you downloaded and add it
  5. You should be automatically returned back to the Add-ons screen. From there go to Get Add-ons -> Repo Aeon MQ 3 -> Skin -> Aeon MQ 3. You should now see the Install button to install the theme.
  6. When the download finishes you should get a prompt asking if you want to switch to the new skin. Choose Yes.
  7. When you go back to the XBMC home screen you’ll be prompted with a short wizard that walks you through a couple of the basic configuration steps. You’ll also be able to choose how complex/customizable you want the skin to be. For myself I went with the Normal option, but don’t fret too much over any of the options you choose because you can always go back and change them in the skin settings.

You should now be sporting a refreshed XBMC look and feel, but to really take advantage of it you’ll need to dive into some of the skin’s settings (Settings -> Skin). If you went with the Aeon MQ 3 theme you may want to enable some of the alternate views for your videos:

  1. In XBMC go to Settings -> Skin -> ViewTypes and browse through the different views that are available. Turn on any of the views you think you might want to use, but note that some of the views require other add-ons since they use artwork that the built-in TV/movie scraper doesn’t grab. This is what the view selection looks like:
    Xbmc 3d view
  2. Navigate back to one of your media folders in XBMC, and you should be able to either press the up/down or left/right arrow to make the view menu appear along the left side of the screen. From there you can switch between any of the views you just enabled as well as tweak certain aspects of each of the views.
    Xbmc banner view

CyberNet’s XBMC Guides:

Copyright © 2014 CyberNetNews.com

Tizen stumbles as hardware fails to appear

Tizen may have two new smartwatches to its name, but the open-source OS is still struggling to convince the mobile world that it’s the best alternative to Android and iOS. … Continue reading

Facebook Messenger coming to Windows Phone 8

This week in Barcelona, Microsoft’s Joe Belfiore suggested that the spread of Windows Phone 8 across the planet is leading in to a greater app spread. This suggestion also had … Continue reading